204 N.W. 416 | Iowa | 1925
This is an action upon an attachment bond, to recover actual and punitive damages for the wrongful and malicious suing out and levying of a writ of attachment. Plaintiffs and the Van 1. NEW TRIAL: Donselaars are nonresidents of this state. The discretion bond was executed by the Maryland Casualty of court: Company as surety at Sioux City, Iowa. The excessive original notice was served upon it alone, and exemplary the Van Donselaars are not parties to this damages. appeal.
On March 15, 1921, the Van Donselaars instituted an action in the district court of Woodbury County against appellants, claiming damages in the sum of $10,000 on account of false and fraudulent representations alleged to have been made in the sale of a certain tract of land situated in Lyman County, South Dakota. Jurisdiction was obtained in that action by the attachment of a sum of money belonging to the Joneses, in the possession of a bank in Sioux City. Issues were joined in the original action, and a trial commenced. At the close of the plaintiffs' testimony, and upon the motion of the defendants, the trial court abated the action for want of jurisdiction, on the ground that the defendants were induced by the fraud and trickery of the plaintiffs to send their property into this state. Plaintiffs appealed from this ruling by the trial court, but it was affirmed. See Van Donselaar v. Jones,
The ground upon which the motion for a new trial was sustained in both instances was the passion and prejudice of the jury. The court, upon the latter trial, in sustaining the motion, specifically overruled all other grounds stated therein, with the result that both parties have appealed. The appeal of plaintiffs having been first taken, we shall denominate them the appellants.
There is no substantial difference in the views of counsel as to the law of the case. It is conceded that the ground stated in the petition for an attachment, which was that the defendants therein were nonresidents of the state of Iowa, 2. ATTACHMENT: is true. It was, therefore, necessary for wrongful appellants to allege and prove that the attachment: plaintiffs in the attachment suit had neither action on cause of action against them nor reasonable bond: no cause to believe that the allegations of their cause of petition were true. Counsel for appellants action. charge error in the court's ruling sustaining the motion for a new trial, upon the ground that the court in so ruling abused its discretion. On the other hand, counsel for appellee maintain that the verdict was so clearly the result of passion and prejudice on the part of the jury that it was the duty of the court to set aside the verdict and to grant a new trial; and set forth, as a further ground, that appellants offered no testimony to sustain the allegations of their petition that the attachment was willfully and maliciously sued out, and without probable cause.
The jury, in answer to special interrogatories submitted by the court, found actual damages in the sum of $3,409.56 and exemplary damages in the sum of $6,515.04. The actual damages allowed were itemized in appellants' petition, and consisted of $572 interest on the money attached, $2,150 attorney fees expended in securing the abatement of the attachment, and other expenses incurred in the progress of the litigation. The *179
method by which the jury arrived at the sum allowed as exemplary damages is not disclosed. The amount for which judgment was asked in the petition was $10,000. There is, of course, no precise standard by which exemplary damages can be measured, and it would not be an easy matter to determine how the jury arrived at its conclusion on this subject. The actual damages sustained by appellants on account of the attachment, aside from the necessary expenses incurred in the litigation, were small. The court below was of the opinion that the amount awarded as exemplary damages was too large, and that the jury was influenced by passion and prejudice. Excerpts from the argument of counsel for appellant to the jury are set out in the record. Objection thereto was properly sustained by the court, who promptly instructed the jury to disregard the remarks of counsel. Ordinarily, the caution of the trial judge would be sufficient to remove the prejudice; but it is not improbable that this incident received some consideration from the court at the time of ruling on the motion. The fact that two verdicts have been returned for appellants upon substantially the same testimony is strongly urged by counsel in support of their contention that the court, in sustaining the motion for a new trial, abused its discretion. In this connection, our attention is called to a recent decision by this court, McElfresh v. McElfresh,
FAVILLE, C.J., and ARTHUR and ALBERT, JJ., concur.